Commentary/Mani Shankar Aiyar
Chidambaram did nothing to plan for Rajiv Gandhi's security in the
event of conspirators sinking the ship of state
It is this loophole that V P Singh has been trying to wriggle
through in justifying before the Jain Commission his decision
to let SPG cover for Rajiv Gandhi lapse some two months after
Rajiv Gandhi laid down the office of prime minister.
V P Singh's
argument will not wash because, as V P Singh himself has had to
concede, there was nothing in the SPG Act which precluded his
taking the same legislative steps to amend the Act which, since
the amendment of September 1991, has provided him, as an ex-PM,
with SPG protection.
The point, however, remains: Would you give your brief to a lawyer
who fails to address himself to this elementary point when, as
minister, he drafts a law on the subject? Confronted in the Jain
Commission with the question of why he had not taken this contingency
into account in drafting the SPG Bill, Chidambaram tried to slide
down the escape hatch of saying that it was not his decision but
the Cabinet's -- and he has not even a member of the Cabinet then.
Asked subsequently whether it was not he who was responsible for
the Note which went to Cabinet, he was cornered into confessing
that he had indeed cleared the Cabinet note. In which case, the
question remained: why, as the minister in charge, had he failed
to bring this contingency to the attention of the Cabinet? And
failed also to point out in the Cabinet note that the proposed
legislation would fundamentally alter the position of the SPG
from a force to protect the incumbent prime minister to a force
that would not only protect any prime minister, whatever the level
of threat perception, but more to the point, would legally debar
the SPG from extending protection to the person for whom the SPG
had been specifically created in the event of that person ceasing
to be PM.
The SPG Bill went before Parliament, P Chidambaram at the helm
piloting the stormy course of the Bill. In the Rajya Sabha, P
Upendra, then of the Telugu Desam, pointedly asked what would
happen in the event to Rajiv Gandhi ceasing to be PM. Chidambaram,
in his reply, said he would now turn to Upendra's argument when
D Ghosh of the CPI-M rose to his feet on another point; by the
time that was over, Chidambaram forgot to respond to Upendra --
and so no one ever knew what Chidambaram had in mind by way of
a reply to Upendra.
The point is that even if the contingency
of Rajiv Gandhi ceasing to be PM had not earlier been raised,
and even if it would have been par for the course for Chidambaram
to have given Upendra a witty or diverting reply, the fact is
that any minister of internal security worth his salt should surely
have been alerted to the need to deal with such a contingency
in the secretary of the North Block, if not in the glare of the
Rajya Sabha's proceedings.
Yet, it would appear from Chidambaram's
deposition before the Jain Commission that even after having been
specifically alerted to the need for suitable alternative arrangements
in the event of Rajiv Gandhi losing the elections, Chidambaram -- and -- Sesshan --
did absolutely nothing about it. They were content to play the
politics of mindlessly muttering that the great Indian electorate
would never reject the Congress. They totally failed in their
professional duty of planning for such a contingency and, if required,
going back to Cabinet with their proposals.
Look again closely at the dates. If the SPG Act had been drafted
in 1985, when Rajiv Gandhi had just secured three-quarters of
the seats in the Lok Sabha, it might have been (barely) forgiveable
for the minister of internal security to imagine that Rajiv
Gandhi was going to remain PM forever. But by 1988, Rajiv Gandhi
had lost every state assembly election bar Tripura since March
1985, the Jan Morcha led by V P Singh was in full cry, and a hundred
political conspiracies were being hatched to unseat the ruling
party.
As minister of state in the home ministry, Chidambaram
was privy to all intelligence reports. Those reports could not
have said anything very different to what every editorial was
underlining, that Rajiv Gandhi was in serious political trouble
and could well be undermined at any time, even by his Congress
colleagues let alone the Opposition. Yet, it appears from the
Jain Commission records, the minister in charge of Rajiv Gandhi's
security did nothing to plan for his charge's security in the
event of the conspirators sinking the ship of state.
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